Lock-in is Painful

This story hurts almost too much to tell.

This last spring a friend of mine for 25 years called asking for help with his small 2-year old business.  He was competing in a fiercely competitive wireless data marketplace, where the rewards were potentially huge but no sure thing.  His ambition was high, but his performance was struggling.

I met with him, and all too quickly realized that he was locked into management practices he had learned 15 years earlier as a successful executive in a very, very large wireless company.  He was trying to run his new company, his much smaller company, the same way he ran the very large division of the much larger corporation.  He wasn’t nimble, he wasn’t agile.  He wasn’t holding the door open for extensive innovation amongst his 80 person staff, but instead he was trying hold to "hold everyone’s feet to the fire on performance" (against standards he was setting.)  He wasn’t experimenting with new options, new ways of competing and disruptive market practices – instead he was trying to compete head on with much larger and better healed (although unprofitable) competitors.

I worked with him for two weeks trying to increase his agility.  I offered him lots of options.  He wasn’t willing to try new approaches, but rather he wanted someone to help make his business model more productive (and successful).  At one point I pointed out that he wasn’t being as flexible as he might consider, to which he responded "I’m not inflexible, it’s just that there’s only one way to do this kind of business."

He stayed locked in to his business model, to his behavioral model and to his single-minded approach.  I learned within the last two weeks that he’s now out of his company (his investors pushed him out) and the company is floundering – likely to be shut down shortly.

Lock-in can afflict any company of any size or age.  Lock-in doesn’t only apply to large and mature organizations.  And no matter where lock-in takes hold, it is both painful and deadly.

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